Skip to content
The Climate Litigation Database

Chattooga Conservancy v. U.S. Department of Agriculture

About this case

Filing year
2024
Status
Judgment entered for defendants.
Docket number
1:24-cv-00518
Court/admin entity
United StatesUnited States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.D.C.)United StatesUnited States Federal Courts
Case category
Federal Statutory Claims (US)NEPA (US)
Principal law
United StatesAdministrative Procedure Act (APA)United StatesNational Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
At issue
Challenge to the U.S. Forest Service’s alleged failure to account for the aggregate carbon effects of actions taken each year to fulfill annual “timber targets."
Topics
, ,

Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
Beta
Search results
03/30/2026
Judgment entered for defendants.
The federal district court for the District of Columbia rejected plaintiffs’ claim that the U.S. Forest Service’s environmental reviews of three timber projects failed to properly weigh cumulative carbon emissions. The projects were located in Missouri, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Citing the Supreme Court’s clarification in <a href="https://www.climatecasechart.com/collections/seven-county-infrastructure-coalition-v-eagle-county_f6b1f2">Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County</a> regarding the “substantial deference” due to agencies’ decisions in National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) reviews, the court declined to “second-guess” or “micromanage” choices the Forest Service made in its reviews of the timber projects, including “decisions on which projects are relevant” for a cumulative effects analysis and “how to measure and contextualize the anticipated cumulative effects.” The court found that the environmental review documents, “[r]ead together, … establish that the agency considered the cumulative carbon-emitting effects of the project but concluded that the overall effects would not be negative.” The court also ruled that the setting of annual timber targets was not a discrete final agency action subject to review under the Administrative Procedure Act.
Decision
02/23/2026
Reply filed by federal defendants in support of cross-motion for summary judgment.
Reply
06/07/2024
Memorandum filed in support of federal defendants' motion to partially dismiss plaintiffs' first amended complaint.
Motion To Dismiss
02/26/2024
Complaint filed.
A lawsuit filed in federal district court in the District of Columbia challenged the U.S. Forest Service’s alleged failure to account for the aggregate carbon effects of actions taken each year to fulfill annual “timber targets,” which the plaintiffs described as “mandatory performance metrics” that “drive logging levels on the National Forest System.” The plaintiffs—two environmental groups and a resident of Missouri—alleged that the failure to consider the impacts of national, regional, and unit-specific timber targets violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). They also alleged that project-level analyses for projects in Sumter National Forest, Nantahala National Forest, and Mark Twain National Forest violated NEPA and asked the court to enjoin the Forest Service from proceeding with the remaining commercial timber-harvest portions of these projects until it complies with NEPA. They also requested that the court enjoin the Forest Service from offering additional timber sales to fulfill fiscal year 2024 timber targets for Regions 8 and 9. The complaint alleged that failure to consider cumulative carbon emissions disproportionately affects forests in the East and the South because the volumetric timber targets incentivized logging in the most carbon-dense forests.
Complaint

Summary

Challenge to the U.S. Forest Service’s alleged failure to account for the aggregate carbon effects of actions taken each year to fulfill annual “timber targets."

 Topics mentioned most in this case  
Beta

See how often topics get mentioned in this case and view specific passages of text highlighted in each document. Accuracy is not 100%. Learn more

Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance